Wrong. Main production ended in the late 80s, however they could be ordered until the 90s (overstocked units, built from surplus parts, etc.) The ending in the 80s bit was me only focusing on main production and not afterwards.
Wrong. Main production ended in the late 80s, however they could be ordered until the 90s (overstocked units, built from surplus parts, etc.) The ending in the 80s bit was me only focusing on main production and not afterwards.
Correct.
It was single tone, more square and was overall different to the Thunderbolt we know and love. '89 was really the plug pulling of mainstream Thunderbolt production so that is technically where production for it ended. The Thunderbolt after '89, although different, was on special order as well If I remember correctly.
1993 bolt was a big experiment for the Tbolt as a last resort to try and boost sales on it, but with the dual tone requirements gone with Civil Defense and the uprise of battery backup, this made the Tbolt seem like more trouble than it was worth. The 2001-SRN inevitably outsold it with the Tbolt only scoring around 10 units sold.
https://www.thesirenboard.com/projects/tbolt/page4.htmlAdam Smith wrote:Pete asked around, and found that this is a Series B Thunderbolt, a short-lived attempt to modernize the design. Apparently, there were problems with this motor getting loose on the mounting plate and getting stuck out of alignment (rotor stuck to inside of stator). So, Federal quickly cranked out the Series C Thunderbolt, which was reverted to the model 2 style chopper motor. The workaround for this Series B unit is to use lock washers and retaining compound on the 4 motor-mounting bolts.
I was the one that found it. Unfortunately it was removed shortly after the street view was taken.Greenfield1003 wrote: ↑Sun Mar 04, 2018 11:05 pmBringing this thread back to it's original topic...there is a thunderbolt 1003 at the sewage plant in Cloverdale, Indiana. Unknown if it's active or not but supposedly the county tests on the first Friday of every month at 11:00.
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